Key Takeaways
- Price range: AMRs cost $50,000-$250,000+ per unit. AGVs cost $50,000-$150,000 per unit in Australia (2026 pricing).
- Core difference: AMRs navigate dynamically using LiDAR SLAM and vision - no fixed infrastructure required. AGVs follow predetermined paths via magnetic tape, wire or laser reflectors embedded in the facility.
- If your facility layout changes more than twice a year or pedestrians share the aisles: specify AMR. If routes are permanently fixed and the environment is controlled with no pedestrian crossings: AGV at 30-50% lower infrastructure cost.
- Deployment speed: AMRs deploy in 2-6 weeks (no floor infrastructure). AGVs take 8-16 weeks including path installation and commissioning.
- Flexibility vs reliability trade-off: AMRs reroute around obstacles in real time. AGVs stop and wait until the path clears - higher reliability on fixed routes but zero flexibility when blocked.
- Both require WHS compliance: AS/NZS 4024.3 (robot safety) and documented risk assessment under WHS Act before deployment in any Australian facility.
Industrial Mobile Robot (AMR) vs AGV Australia (2026): Navigation, Flexibility, Deployment Cost and Choosing the Right Automated Transport for Your Facility
AMRs and AGVs both automate material transport in warehouses, distribution centres and manufacturing plants. Both move payloads from A to B without a human operator. But AMRs navigate dynamically and AGVs follow fixed paths - and this single difference drives every downstream decision: deployment cost, installation time, layout flexibility, obstacle handling and scalability. Choosing the wrong type either overspends on flexibility the facility does not need or locks the operation into a rigid path that breaks every time the layout changes.
This guide compares both technologies across capability, cost and facility fit. To compare pricing, get quotes for industrial mobile robots or get quotes for AGVs on IndustrySearch.
Facilities where this comparison drives the automation purchase:
- 3PL and distribution centres evaluating first-time automated material transport
- Manufacturing plants with both fixed production lines and dynamic staging areas
- E-commerce fulfilment centres with seasonal layout changes and high pedestrian traffic
- FMCG and automotive plants with established assembly line supply routes
Step 1: Choose Your Navigation Requirement
Before costing anything, confirm whether your facility needs dynamic navigation or fixed-path reliability. Your answer determines the technology type.
Factor | AMR (Autonomous Mobile Robot) | AGV (Automated Guided Vehicle) |
|---|---|---|
Navigation | LiDAR SLAM, 3D vision, dynamic path planning | Magnetic tape, wire, laser reflectors - fixed paths |
Obstacle handling | Reroutes around obstacles in real time | Stops and waits until path clears |
Layout flexibility | New routes added via software in hours | New routes require physical path installation |
Floor infrastructure | None required | Magnetic tape, embedded wire or reflectors required |
Deployment time | 2-6 weeks | 8-16 weeks |
Unit price range | $50,000-$250,000+ | $50,000-$150,000 |
If your facility layout changes more than twice a year or pedestrians regularly share the transport aisles, specify AMR. If your routes have been fixed for 5+ years and the environment is fully controlled with no pedestrian crossings, AGV delivers equivalent throughput at lower infrastructure cost.
AMRs map the facility using onboard LiDAR and build a digital floor plan. When an obstacle appears - a parked forklift, a pallet, a pedestrian - the AMR calculates an alternative route and continues. This makes AMRs the default choice for mixed-traffic environments and facilities that reconfigure seasonally.
AGVs follow a physical path with absolute precision. They run the same route, at the same speed, with the same stopping points, every cycle. For fixed assembly line supply (automotive, FMCG production), this repeatability is an advantage. The trade-off: any route change requires physical path modification at $5,000-$20,000 per route.
Step 2: Evaluate the Key Specifications
With your technology type confirmed, these are the specs that separate models within each category.
Specification | AMR | AGV |
|---|---|---|
Payload range | 60-1,500 kg | 100-5,000 kg+ |
Speed (loaded) | 1.0-2.0 m/s | 0.5-1.5 m/s |
Safety system | 360-degree LiDAR, 3D cameras, bump sensors | Bumper sensors, light curtains, zone scanners |
Battery runtime | 8-16 hours | 8-12 hours |
Route change cost | $0 (software update) | $5,000-$20,000 per route (physical modification) |
The most common mistake is deploying AGVs in a facility that reconfigures seasonally. Each layout change requires $5,000-$20,000 in path modification plus 1-2 weeks of downtime per route. After 2-3 reconfigurations, the cumulative cost exceeds the AMR premium. The consequence is a system that costs more than an AMR over 3 years while delivering less flexibility.
Step 3: Understand the Full Cost Breakdown (2026 Prices)
AMR unit prices are higher, but AGV infrastructure costs close the gap. The total deployment comparison depends on facility complexity and route count.
Category | AMR (3-unit fleet, AUD) | AGV (3-unit fleet, AUD) |
|---|---|---|
Units (3x) | $150,000-$600,000 | $150,000-$450,000 |
Path infrastructure | $0 | $15,000-$60,000 |
Software + integration | $50,000-$150,000 | $30,000-$80,000 |
Charging + safety | $15,000-$35,000 | $15,000-$35,000 |
Total deployed | $215,000-$785,000 | $210,000-$625,000 |
Route change cost (per change) | $0 | $5,000-$20,000 |
For a facility with 4+ route changes over 5 years, the AMR's zero-infrastructure route flexibility makes it the lower total-cost option despite the higher unit price. For a facility with zero route changes, the AGV saves 15-30% on deployed cost. If you are within 8 weeks of a deployment decision, get quotes for industrial mobile robots to compare pricing across both technologies.
Step 4: Decision Framework - AMR vs AGV
Decision Factor | Choose AMR | Choose AGV |
|---|---|---|
Layout change frequency | 2+ times per year | Stable for 3+ years |
Pedestrian traffic | Shared human-robot aisles | Separated zones, no pedestrian crossings |
Deployment speed | 2-6 weeks (no floor work) | 8-16 weeks (path installation required) |
Payload class | 60-1,500 kg (totes to pallets) | 100-5,000 kg+ (pallets to heavy loads) |
Route repeatability | Variable routes, obstacle avoidance needed | Same route, same stops, every cycle |
Budget priority | Lower total cost if routes change over 5 years | Lower initial deployment cost if routes stay fixed |
Step 5: Evaluate Suppliers
You are ready to go to market. Use this checklist to compare both technologies from the same or different suppliers.
Factor | What to Ask |
|---|---|
Both types quoted | Can the supplier quote both AMR and AGV for a direct deployment cost comparison? |
Site assessment | Will the supplier conduct a site assessment including floor condition, aisle widths and traffic analysis? |
Deployed cost | What is the total deployed cost including units, infrastructure, software and safety validation? |
WMS integration | What does integration with your specific WMS cost for each technology? |
Safety validation | Is a documented AS/NZS 4024.3 risk assessment included in the deployment? |
Pilot availability | Can you deploy 1-2 units as a pilot before committing to a full fleet? |
Route change cost | What does it cost to add or modify a route on each technology? |
Service response | What is the guaranteed response time for hardware and software issues in your state? |
Warranty | What is the hardware and software warranty for each technology? |
Australian references | Can the supplier provide references from comparable Australian deployments? |
Frequently Asked Questions
When does an AMR's higher unit price become cheaper than an AGV over 5 years?
When the facility requires 4+ route changes over 5 years. Each AGV route modification costs $5,000-$20,000 plus downtime - cumulative cost that AMRs avoid entirely through software-based rerouting.
Can AMRs and AGVs operate in the same facility?
Yes, but they require separate fleet management systems unless the supplier offers a unified platform. Mixed deployments add software integration cost of $20,000-$50,000.
Which technology is safer in shared human-robot environments?
AMRs with 360-degree LiDAR and dynamic obstacle avoidance are better suited to shared zones. AGVs rely on bumper sensors and stop on contact or proximity - they cannot reroute around a pedestrian.
How long does each technology take to deploy?
AMRs: 2-6 weeks (no floor infrastructure required). AGVs: 8-16 weeks including magnetic tape or wire path installation, commissioning and testing.
What WHS compliance applies to both AMR and AGV deployments in Australia?
Both require compliance with AS/NZS 4024.3 (industrial robot safety) and a documented risk assessment under WHS Act PCBU obligations before deployment.
What Matters Most
- Layout stability determines the technology: dynamic layouts = AMR; fixed routes = AGV
- AMRs deploy 3-4x faster: no floor infrastructure required
- AGVs cost less initially for fixed routes: 15-30% lower deployed cost when no route changes are needed
- Route change cost is the tipping point: 4+ changes over 5 years makes AMR the lower total-cost option
- Both require AS/NZS 4024.3 compliance: documented risk assessment before any deployment
Most buyers deploy a 1-2 unit pilot after getting comparative quotes across both technologies.
Don't waste time contacting suppliers individually. IndustrySearch gives you direct access to verified Australian automated transport suppliers - where industrial buyers request and compare multiple quotes so they can buy with confidence.
- Get quotes for industrial mobile robots - contact multiple verified suppliers with a single enquiry
- Compare models - filter by capacity, configuration and region
- Contact suppliers directly - speak to specialists who service your state
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